Long-term safety, tolerability and efficacy of apomorphine sublingual film in patients with Parkinson’s disease complicated by OFF episodes: a phase 3, open-label study

Author:

Kassubek JanORCID,Factor Stewart A.ORCID,Balaguer ErnestORCID,Schwarz JohannesORCID,Chaudhuri K. RayORCID,Isaacson Stuart H.ORCID,Wu Stacy,Denecke Muhr Carmen,Kulisevsky JaimeORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Apomorphine sublingual film (SL-APO) is an on-demand treatment for OFF episodes in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD). Objective To assess the long-term (≥ 3 years) safety/tolerability and efficacy of SL-APO. Methods Study CTH-301 (http://www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT02542696; registered 2015-09-03) was a phase 3, multicentre, open-label study of SL-APO in PD patients with motor fluctuations, comprised of a dose-titration and long-term safety phase. All participants received SL-APO. The primary endpoint was safety/tolerability (treatment-emergent adverse events [TEAEs]) during the long-term safety phase. Efficacy assessments included the Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) part III (motor examination), assessed at weeks 24, 36 and 48 during the first year of the long-term safety phase. Results 496 patients were included and 120 (24.2%) completed the long-term safety phase. Mean duration of SL-APO exposure was 294.3 days. TEAEs related to study drug were experienced by 65.3% of patients (most common: nausea [6.0%], stomatitis [1.8%], lip swelling [1.8%], dizziness [1.6%], oral mucosal erythema [1.6%], mouth ulceration [1.6%]). TEAEs leading to study drug withdrawal were experienced by 34.0% of patients (most common: nausea [5.4%], lip swelling [4.5%], mouth ulceration [2.6%], stomatitis [2.3%]). A clinically meaningful reduction in MDS-UPDRS part III score was observed as soon as 15 min following administration of SL-APO, with peak effects observed approximately 30 min post-dose and sustained up to 90 min post-dose; results were consistent over 48 weeks. Conclusions SL-APO was generally well tolerated and efficacious over the long term as an on-demand treatment for OFF episodes in patients with PD.

Funder

Sunovion

Bial – Portela & C

Universitätsklinikum Ulm

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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